| Onyxmeth said: All games require you to study. You didn't pick up Smash Bros. either and just started rocking at it. While the moves may all be performed in the same manner of button presses, it still requires you to study the actual moves each player has and understand the strengths and weaknesses of them. Other games in your collection that I'm sure took a slight bit of study: Ace Combat 6 Seriously man, you've got an awful lot of fighting games in your collection for someone so hellbent on not learning basic moves in a 17 year old fighting series. If you don't like Street Fighter, just say you don't like it, but the reasoning you gave just makes no sense since a good portion of your games require plenty of study and aren't simply pick up and play.
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All of the games you listed can be learned in minutes in their entirity of gameplay functions, with the exception of the MK games, which I'm not too fond of anyway, and Marvel vs. Capcom, which I learned because of how much I loved Marvel at the time. Strategy games require complex thinking, but a good one doesn't have complex rules, and certainly not an unnecessarily large amount of buttons like Street Fighter.
A good game for me uses simple rules in complex and creative ways. Street Fighter is the opposite of this mantra. It adds more buttons and more combos to create complexity, rather than using simple existing formulas.








